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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

JWST Successfully Measures Mass of Dormant Black Hole from the Early Universe for the First Time

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
June 4, 2026
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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JWST Successfully Measures Mass of Dormant Black Hole from the Early Universe for the First Time — Chemistry
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In a groundbreaking stride for astrophysics, an international consortium of astronomers, led by Andrew Newman of Carnegie Science, has achieved the unprecedented: a direct measurement of the mass of a dormant supermassive black hole residing in a galaxy from the dawn of the universe. This remarkable discovery leverages the unparalleled imaging capabilities of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) coupled with the cosmic phenomenon of gravitational lensing to probe a black hole over 10 billion light-years away, pushing the boundaries of black hole astrophysics far beyond the local universe.

Unlike actively accreting black holes, which announce their presence through intense radiation emitted by infalling gas, dormant black holes remain elusive and silent. The key to Newman’s team’s success lay in observing the gravitational influence this colossal entity exerts on the stars within its host galaxy, designated MRG-M0138. This galaxy, observed during an epoch when the universe was merely 3 billion years old, harbors a black hole weighing an astonishing six billion solar masses. By mapping the dynamics of stars accelerated by this black hole’s gravity using JWST’s infrared spectrograph, the team extracted a direct estimate of its mass without the need for luminous accretion signatures.

Previous measurements of black hole masses through stellar dynamics have been confined largely to the local universe—within approximately 700 million light-years—owing to the limited resolution of telescopes. The 2020 Nobel-winning technique that traced individual star orbits around the Milky Way’s central black hole similarly could not be deployed at cosmological distances. However, with JWST’s high spatial resolution and sensitivity, combined with the magnification advantages of gravitational lensing by a foreground galactic cluster, this research pushed stellar dynamical measurements into the distant universe for the very first time.

Gravitational lensing, a phenomenon predicted by Einstein’s general relativity, acts as a cosmic telescope by bending and amplifying the light from background galaxies like MRG-M0138. This magnification, approximately 30-fold in angular size, transforms faint galaxies into accessible targets for detailed study. Effectively, it allowed the research team to peer within the black hole’s sphere of influence—the critical region where its gravitational force dominates stellar motions—providing an unprecedented window into black hole-host galaxy co-evolution at early cosmic times.

MRG-M0138 stands as a testament to the rapid and dynamic processes governing galaxy evolution in the early universe. The galaxy is no longer forming stars, hinting that energetic feedback from the black hole may have quenched star formation by expelling or heating the gas reservoir needed for stellar birth. This observation aligns with theoretical models where black holes regulate their host galaxies, sculpting the evolutionary pathways of massive galaxies through powerful quasar phases followed by quiescence.

The implications of this research extend far beyond a single measurement. By confirming that the tight correlations observed in the local universe between black hole mass and galactic properties existed over ten billion years ago, the results suggest that galaxy and black hole growth were intimately linked from an early epoch. This bridges a critical gap in our understanding of astrophysical feedback mechanisms and provides a crucial benchmark for simulations of galaxy formation and evolution.

This study heralds a new era where the combination of next-generation space telescopes and natural cosmic lenses can unravel the mysteries of supermassive black holes across cosmic history. As JWST continues to survey the skies, and with forthcoming observatories like the Euclid satellite and the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope set to discover numerous gravitational lenses, astronomers anticipate a burgeoning sample of distant, dormant black holes to analyze.

Furthermore, the Giant Magellan Telescope, currently under construction at Carnegie Science’s Las Campanas Observatory in Chile, promises unmatched spatial resolution and light-gathering power, enabling even more precise measurements of stellar dynamics in distant galaxies. This synergy of observational tools is poised to revolutionize our comprehension of how the universe’s most massive black holes formed, evolved, and influenced their galactic environments over billions of years.

In essence, this pioneering research not only defines a milestone in black hole astrophysics by pushing the frontier of direct mass measurements to unparalleled distances but also illuminates the evolutionary narratives of galaxies themselves. It marks a fundamental leap in our ability to study the quiet giants of the early cosmos and deepens our understanding of the cosmic interplay between black holes and their vast stellar hosts.

As these techniques and technologies mature, scientists envision a profound enhancement in our cosmic census of supermassive black holes across epochs, facilitating rigorous tests of theoretical frameworks and refining models that describe the intricate dance of matter and energy shaping our universe. This research embodies the transformative potential of modern observational astronomy and offers a tantalizing glimpse into the universe’s formative eras that have remained hidden until now.

Subject of Research:
A dormant supermassive black hole in a galaxy from the early universe.

Article Title:
A stellar dynamical mass measurement of an inactive black hole at redshift 2.

News Publication Date:
4-Jun-2026.

Web References:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.adx5816

References:
Newman, A. et al. (2026). A stellar dynamical mass measurement of an inactive black hole at redshift 2. Science. DOI: 10.1126/science.adx5816.

Image Credits:
Navid Marvi / Carnegie Science.

Keywords

JWST, black hole mass measurement, dormant black hole, gravitational lensing, stellar dynamics, supermassive black hole, early universe, galaxy evolution, quasar feedback, cosmic history, MRG-M0138, astronomical spectroscopy.

Tags: black hole astrophysics beyond local universeblack hole mass estimation methodscosmic dawn black hole researchdistant galaxy black hole dynamicsdormant supermassive black holes early universeearly universe black hole gravitational effectsgalaxy MRG-M0138 black hole studygravitational lensing black hole observationinfrared spectrograph astrophysics JWSTJames Webb Space Telescope black hole mass measurementsilent black holes detection techniquessupermassive black holes formation epoch

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